Class 12 LAND RESOURCES AND AGRICULTURE MCQ
**1. What category of land-use includes areas demarcated by the government for forest growth in Land Revenue Records?**
– (a) Culturable Wasteland
– (b) Area under Permanent Pastures and Grazing Lands
– (c) Forests
– (d) Barren and Wastelands
Answer
Answer: (c) Forests
**2. Which type of land is typically unsuitable for cultivation with available technology, such as barren hilly terrains and desert lands?**
– (a) Area under Permanent Pastures and Grazing Lands
– (b) Culturable Wasteland
– (c) Barren and Wastelands
– (d) Current Fallow
Answer
Answer: (c) Barren and Wastelands
**3. What does the category “Land put to Non-agricultural Uses” include in land-use classification?**
– (a) Area under Miscellaneous Tree Crops and Groves
– (b) Fallow other than Current Fallow
– (c) Land under settlements, infrastructure, industries, etc.
– (d) Net Area Sown
Answer
Answer: (c) Land under settlements, infrastructure, industries, etc.
**4. Which category comprises land owned by the village ‘Panchayat’ or the Government, often considered as ‘Common Property Resources’?**
– (a) Culturable Wasteland
– (b) Area under Permanent Pastures and Grazing Lands
– (c) Current Fallow
– (d) Area under Miscellaneous Tree Crops and Groves
Answer
Answer: (b) Area under Permanent Pastures and Grazing Lands
**5. What is the category of land-use that includes orchards and privately owned land under fruit trees?**
– (a) Culturable Wasteland
– (b) Current Fallow
– (c) Fallow other than Current Fallow
– (d) Area under Miscellaneous Tree Crops and Groves
Answer
Answer: (d) Area under Miscellaneous Tree Crops and Groves
**6. How is ‘Culturable Wasteland’ defined in terms of uncultivated land duration?**
– (a) More than five years
– (b) Less than one agricultural year
– (c) More than one year but less than five years
– (d) Exactly five years
Answer
Answer: (a) More than five years
**7. What is the purpose of fallowing as a cultural practice in the context of land-use?**
– (a) Increasing land fertility
– (b) Accelerating crop growth
– (c) Preventing soil erosion
– (d) Enhancing water retention
Answer
Answer: (a) Increasing land fertility
**8. How is ‘Current Fallow’ different from ‘Fallow other than Current Fallow’?**
– (a) Duration of uncultivation
– (b) Type of crops grown
– (c) Ownership status
– (d) Availability of water resources
Answer
Answer: (a) Duration of uncultivation
**9. What is the term for the physical extent of land on which crops are sown and harvested?**
– (a) Net Area Sown
– (b) Jal Gram
– (c) Jal Kshetra
– (d) Jal Yojana
Answer
Answer: (a) Net Area Sown
**1. What factor significantly influences land-use in a region according to the given content?**
– (a) Population density
– (b) Economic activities
– (c) Climate change
– (d) Political stability
Answer
Answer: (b) Economic activities
**2. How does the size of the economy impact land-use, as explained in the passage?**
– (a) It decreases pressure on land
– (b) It has no impact on land-use
– (c) It increases pressure on land
– (d) It leads to land conservation
Answer
Answer: (c) It increases pressure on land
**3. In which sectors does the economy usually experience faster growth over time, leading to a shift in land-use?**
– (a) Primary sector
– (b) Secondary and tertiary sectors
– (c) Agricultural sector
– (d) Service sector
Answer
Answer: (b) Secondary and tertiary sectors
**4. Where do land-use changes tend to be sharp, especially around urban areas, according to the passage?**
– (a) Rural farmlands
– (b) Forested regions
– (c) Coastal areas
– (d) Large urban areas
Answer
Answer: (d) Large urban areas
**5. What is the primary reason for the gradual shift of land from agricultural uses to non-agricultural uses over time?**
– (a) Decline in population
– (b) Technological advancements
– (c) Changes in income levels
– (d) Growth of secondary and tertiary sectors
Answer
Answer: (d) Growth of secondary and tertiary sectors
**6. What is a common feature of developing countries like India in terms of land-use changes?**
– (a) Decrease in population pressure
– (b) Slow decline in agriculture’s share in GDP
– (c) Rapid decline in economic activities
– (d) Limited urbanization
Answer
Answer: (b) Slow decline in agriculture’s share in GDP
**7. Why does the pressure on agricultural land continue despite a reduction in the sector’s contribution to the economy?**
– (a) Decrease in population dependent on agriculture
– (b) Rapid decline in the number of people to feed
– (c) Increase in the sector’s share in GDP
– (d) Slow decline in the population dependent on agriculture
Answer
Answer: (d) Slow decline in the population dependent on agriculture
**1. What is the time span covered by the land-use changes shown in Figure 3.1?**
– (a) 10 years
– (b) 25 years
– (c) 50 years
– (d) 65 years
Answer
Answer: (c) 50 years
**2. According to the passage, how are the percentages in Figure 3.1 derived?**
– (a) Based on the entire country’s land area
– (b) With respect to the reporting area
– (c) Calculated from the urban areas
– (d) Using satellite imagery
Answer
Answer: (b) With respect to the reporting area
**3. What is the primary reason for the increase in the share of area under non-agricultural uses, according to the passage?**
– (a) Decline in industrial activities
– (b) Expansion of urban and rural settlements
– (c) Decrease in infrastructural facilities
– (d) Reduction in the service sector
Answer
Answer: (b) Expansion of urban and rural settlements
**4. What contributes to the increase in the share of area under forest, as per the passage?**
– (a) Actual increase in forest cover
– (b) Expansion of demarcated forest areas
– (c) Decrease in industrial activities
– (d) Reduction in rural settlements
Answer
Answer: (b) Expansion of demarcated forest areas
**5. Why does the passage mention that the increase in current fallow cannot be explained from information pertaining to only two points?**
– (a) Lack of data on current fallow lands
– (b) Fluctuation over years due to rainfall and cropping cycles
– (c) Irrelevant to land-use changes
– (d) Inconsistencies in reporting
Answer
Answer: (b) Fluctuation over years due to rainfall and cropping cycles
**6. What recent phenomenon is mentioned in the passage regarding net area sown?**
– (a) Decrease due to non-agricultural use
– (b) Increase due to industrial growth
– (c) Increase due to the use of culturable wasteland
– (d) Steady decline over time
Answer
Answer: (c) Increase due to the use of culturable wasteland
**7. What is the primary reason for the decline in net area sown before the recent increase?**
– (a) Increase in non-agricultural use
– (b) Industrial expansion
– (c) Decrease in agricultural activities
– (d) Growth of urban settlements
Answer
Answer: (a) Increase in non-agricultural use
Certainly! Apologies for the oversight. Let’s continue:
**8. What factor has influenced land-use changes in India over the past four or five decades, according to the passage?**
– (a) Political stability
– (b) Economic changes
– (c) Cultural shifts
– (d) Technological advancements
Answer
Answer: (b) Economic changes
**9. How does the passage describe the relationship between the reporting area and changes in land categories?**
– (a) Reporting area influences land changes
– (b) Reporting area remains constant
– (c) Reporting area fluctuates with land changes
– (d) Reporting area is irrelevant to land changes
Answer
Answer: (b) Reporting area remains constant
**10. According to the passage, what has contributed to the increase in the area under non-agricultural uses?**
– (a) Decline in industrial activities
– (b) Expansion of industrial activities
– (c) Decrease in urban settlements
– (d) Reduction in infrastructural facilities
Answer
Answer: (b) Expansion of industrial activities
**11. What is the recent trend in the area under net sown, as per the passage?**
– (a) Steady decline
– (b) Fluctuating over years
– (c) Recent increase
– (d) Continuous increase
Answer
Answer: (c) Recent increase
**12. Why is the increase in the share under forest explained as an expansion of demarcated areas rather than actual forest cover increase?**
– (a) Lack of accurate data on forest cover
– (b) Changes in government policies
– (c) Change in the demarcation process
– (d) Actual increase in forest cover
Answer
Answer: (c) Change in the demarcation process
**13. According to the passage, what influences the trend of current fallow lands over the years?**
– (a) Industrial activities
– (b) Variability of rainfall and cropping cycles
– (c) Technological advancements
– (d) Government policies
Answer
Answer: (b) Variability of rainfall and cropping cycles
**14. What is the main reason for the decline in net area sown before the recent increase?**
– (a) Expansion of urban settlements
– (b) Decrease in population
– (c) Increase in agricultural activities
– (d) Increase in non-agricultural use
Answer
Answer: (d) Increase in non-agricultural use
**15. Which category has shown the highest rate of increase, according to the passage?**
– (a) Area under forest
– (b) Area under non-agricultural uses
– (c) Current fallow lands
– (d) Net area sown
Answer
Answer: (b) Area under non-agricultural uses
**1. What is the primary reason for the decline in barren and wasteland, as mentioned in the passage?**
– (a) Decrease in agricultural pressure
– (b) Increase in agricultural and non-agricultural pressure
– (c) Expansion of cultivation
– (d) Introduction of conservation measures
Answer
Answer: (b) Increase in agricultural and non-agricultural pressure
**2. Why has culturable wasteland witnessed a decline over time, according to the passage?**
– (a) Lack of government attention
– (b) Decrease in agricultural pressure
– (c) Increase in illegal encroachment
– (d) Successful reclamation practices
Answer
Answer: (c) Increase in illegal encroachment
**3. What is the main factor responsible for the decline in land under pastures and grazing lands, as per the passage?**
– (a) Agricultural expansion
– (b) Government policies
– (c) Lack of interest in animal husbandry
– (d) Natural disasters
Answer
Answer: (a) Agricultural expansion
**1. How can land be broadly classified based on ownership, according to the passage?**
– (a) Urban and rural land
– (b) Fertile and barren land
– (c) Private land and common property resources (CPRs)
– (d) Agricultural and non-agricultural land
Answer
Answer: (c) Private land and common property resources (CPRs)
**2. What is the ownership of common property resources (CPRs) as described in the passage?**
– (a) Owned by individuals
– (b) Owned by the state for individual use
– (c) Owned by the community
– (d) Owned by the government
Answer
Answer: (c) Owned by the community
**3. What role do CPRs play in the livelihood of the landless and marginal farmers, according to the passage?**
– (a) Source of employment
– (b) Source of income from livestock
– (c) Space for cultivation
– (d) Resource for industrial use
Answer
Answer: (b) Source of income from livestock
**4. Why are CPRs important for women in rural areas, as mentioned in the passage?**
– (a) Source of income from livestock
– (b) Access to medicinal plants
– (c) Collection of fuel and fodder
– (d) Ownership of natural resources
Answer
Answer: (c) Collection of fuel and fodder
**5. How are CPRs defined in the passage?**
– (a) Government-owned resources
– (b) Private property with communal access
– (c) Community’s natural resources with specific access rights
– (d) Exclusive property rights for individuals
Answer
Answer: (c) Community’s natural resources with specific access rights
**6. What are examples of Common Property Resources (CPRs) mentioned in the passage?**
– (a) Private forests and pasture lands
– (b) Community forests, pasture lands, village water bodies, and public spaces
– (c) Private water bodies and agricultural lands
– (d) Individual households and family units
Answer
Answer: (b) Community forests, pasture lands, village water bodies, and public spaces
**7. Who primarily collects fuel and fodder from Common Property Resources (CPRs) in rural areas, according to the passage?**
– (a) Men
– (b) Livestock
– (c) Women
– (d) Government authorities
Answer
Answer: (c) Women
**8. What is the purpose of CPRs in providing fodder and fuel for households?**
– (a) Commercial use
– (b) Industrial production
– (c) Livelihood support
– (d) Environmental conservation
Answer
Answer: (c) Livelihood support
**9. Why do landless and marginal farmers depend on CPRs for their livelihood, according to the passage?**
– (a) Availability of government support
– (b) Limited access to private land
– (c) Abundance of natural resources
– (d) High fertility of CPRs
Answer
Answer: (b) Limited access to private land
**10. How is the usage of Common Property Resources (CPRs) regulated, as mentioned in the passage?**
– (a) Exclusive property rights
– (b) Specific access rights with obligations
– (c) Government ownership
– (d) Unrestricted usage by the community
Answer
Answer: (b) Specific access rights with obligations
**11. What is the primary source of fuel for households obtained from Common Property Resources (CPRs)?**
– (a) Coal
– (b) Natural gas
– (c) Firewood
– (d) Electricity
Answer
Answer: (c) Firewood
**12. How does the decline in CPRs impact the livelihood of weaker sections, as mentioned in the passage?**
– (a) No impact
– (b) Positive impact
– (c) Negative impact
– (d) Indirect impact
Answer
Answer: (c) Negative impact
**13. What role does CPR play in providing fodder for livestock?**
– (a) Limited role
– (b) No role
– (c) Significant role
– (d) Exclusive role
Answer
Answer
: (c) Significant role
**14. Why are CPRs considered important for women in rural areas?**
– (a) Source of employment
– (b) Cultural significance
– (c) Contribution to environmental conservation
– (d) Collection of fuel and fodder
Answer
Answer: (d) Collection of fuel and fodder
**15. What is the definition of CPRs in the passage?**
– (a) Exclusive property of individuals
– (b) State-owned resources
– (c) Community’s natural resources with specified access rights
– (d) Private property with communal access
Answer
Answer: (c) Community’s natural resources with specified access rights
**1. Why is land resource more crucial for people dependent on agriculture compared to secondary and tertiary activities?**
– (a) Land contributes more to agricultural output
– (b) Land is less significant in agriculture
– (c) Secondary and tertiary activities are land-intensive
– (d) Land ownership is irrelevant in agriculture
Answer
Answer: (a) Land contributes more to agricultural output
**2. What is the direct impact of the quality of land on agriculture, as mentioned in the passage?**
– (a) It has no impact
– (b) It affects other activities more than agriculture
– (c) It is inversely proportional to productivity
– (d) It directly affects productivity
Answer
Answer: (d) It directly affects productivity
**3. Besides its role as a productive factor, what other value does land ownership have in rural areas?**
– (a) Industrial value
– (b) Cultural value
– (c) Social value and security
– (d) Economic value only
Answer
Answer: (c) Social value and security
**4. How is the total stock of agricultural land resources estimated in the passage?**
– (a) Adding up net sown area and all fallow lands
– (b) Subtracting net sown area from fallow lands
– (c) Adding up net sown area, fallow lands, and culturable wasteland
– (d) Multiplying net sown area by fallow lands
Answer
Answer: (c) Adding up net sown area, fallow lands, and culturable wasteland
**5. What has been observed about the total stock of cultivable land in recent years, according to Table 3.1?**
– (a) Significant increase
– (b) Marginal decline
– (c) Steady decline
– (d) Constant growth
Answer
Answer: (b) Marginal decline
**6. What is the urgent need, as stated in the passage, considering the limited scope for bringing in additional land under net sown area in India?**
– (a) Expansion of agricultural land
– (b) Adoption of land-saving technologies
– (c) Increase in fallow lands
– (d) Reduction of cropping intensity
Answer
Answer: (b) Adoption of land-saving technologies
**7. How are land-saving technologies classified in the passage?**
– (a) Those increasing land-use intensity and reducing output
– (b) Those reducing yield per unit area of land
– (c) Those increasing yield per unit area of land and land-use intensity
– (d) Those reducing total output per unit area of land
Answer
Answer: (c) Those increasing yield per unit area of land and land-use intensity
**8. Why is high cropping intensity desirable for a country like India, according to the passage?**
– (a) It reduces the demand for labor
– (b) It increases unemployment
– (c) It maximizes land utilization
– (d) It minimizes the need for land-saving technologies
Answer
Answer: (c) It maximizes land utilization
**9. How is cropping intensity (CI) calculated, as mentioned in the passage?**
– (a) NSA/GCA × 100
– (b) 100 × NSA/GCA
– (c) GCA/NSA × 100
– (d) 100 × GCA/NSA
Answer
Answer: (d) 100 × GCA/NSA
**10. What are the three distinct crop seasons in the northern and interior parts of India, as mentioned in the passage?**
– (a) Summer, autumn, and winter
– (b) Kharif, rabi, and zaid
– (c) Monsoon, pre-monsoon, and post-monsoon
– (d) Spring, summer, and winter
Answer
Answer: (b) Kharif, rabi, and zaid
**11. What crops are typically cultivated during the kharif season in India?**
– (a) Wheat, gram, and mustard
– (b) Rice, cotton, jute, jowar, bajra, and tur
– (c) Watermelons, cucumbers, and vegetables
– (d) Tropical and subtropical crops
Answer
Answer: (b) Rice, cotton, jute, jowar, bajra, and tur
**12. When does the rabi season begin and end, as per the passage?**
– (a) June-July to September-October
– (b) October-November to March-April
– (c) April-May to June-July
– (d) March-April to August-September
Answer
Answer: (b) October-November to March-April
**13. What is zaid, as mentioned in the passage?**
– (a) A type of tropical crop
– (b) A short-duration summer cropping season
– (c) A winter season for temperate crops
– (d) A type of rainfed agriculture
Answer
Answer: (b) A short-duration summer cropping season
**14. Why does the distinction in cropping seasons not exist in southern parts of India, according to the passage?**
– (a) Lack of agricultural activities
– (b) Abundance of water resources
– (c) High temperature and continuous soil moisture availability
– (d) Presence of multiple cropping seasons
Answer
Answer: (c) High temperature and continuous soil moisture availability
**15. What is the primary advantage of the latter kind of technology, as mentioned in the passage?**
– (a) Decrease in land-use intensity
– (b) Reduction in labor demand
– (c) Increase in output and demand for labor
– (d) Minimization of cropping intensity
Answer
Answer: (c) Increase in output and demand for labor
**1. How can farming be classified based on the main source of moisture for crops?**
– (a) Irrigated and rainfed
– (b) Protective and productive
– (c) Dryland and wetland
– (d) Hardy and drought-resistant
Answer
Answer: (a) Irrigated and rainfed
**2. What is the objective of protective irrigation?**
– (a) Achieving high productivity
– (b) Protecting crops from soil moisture deficiency
– (c) Providing excess water over rainfall
– (d) Growing drought-resistant crops
Answer
Answer: (b) Protecting crops from soil moisture deficiency
**3. How does productive irrigation differ from protective irrigation?**
– (a) It aims to protect crops from adverse effects
– (b) It provides excess water over rainfall
– (c) It achieves high productivity
– (d) It conserves soil moisture
Answer
Answer: (c) It achieves high productivity
**4. On what basis is rainfed farming classified into dryland and wetland farming?**
– (a) Type of crops grown
– (b) Objective of irrigation
– (c) Adequacy of soil moisture during cropping season
– (d) Annual rainfall
Answer
Answer: (c) Adequacy of soil moisture during cropping season
**5. Where is dryland farming largely confined in India, according to the passage?**
– (a) Regions with excess rainfall
– (b) Regions with annual rainfall less than 75 cm
– (c) Coastal regions
– (d) Hilly regions
Answer
Answer: (b) Regions with annual rainfall less than 75 cm
**6. What crops are typically grown in regions with dryland farming in India?**
– (a) Rice, jute, and sugarcane
– (b) Ragi, bajra, moong, gram, and guar
– (c) Wheat, gram, and mustard
– (d) Tropical crops
Answer
Answer: (b) Ragi, bajra, moong, gram, and guar
**7. What issues may regions with wetland farming face, as mentioned in the passage?**
– (a) Soil moisture deficiency
– (b) Drought-resistant crops
– (c) Flood and soil erosion hazards
– (d) Aquaculture challenges
Answer
Answer: (c) Flood and soil erosion hazards
1. What percentage of the total cropped area in India is occupied by foodgrains?
(a) 11%
(b) 54%
(c) 66%
(d) 75%
Answer
Answer: (c) 66%
2. How are foodgrains classified based on the structure of grain?
(a) By color
(b) By taste
(c) By size
(d) By aroma
Answer
Answer: (c) By size
3. What is the percentage of cereals in the total cropped area of India?
(a) 11%
(b) 22.07%
(c) 54%
(d) 75%
Answer
Answer: (c) 54%
4. After China and the U.S.A, which country ranks third in cereal production?
(a) India
(b) Brazil
(c) Russia
(d) Australia
Answer
Answer: (a) India
5. What are the two categories into which cereals are classified?
(a) Refined and unrefined
(b) Fine grains and coarse grains
(c) Organic and non-organic
(d) Winter and summer cereals
Answer
Answer: (b) Fine grains and coarse grains
6. What is the staple food for the majority of the population in India?
(a) Maize
(b) Wheat
(c) Barley
(d) Rice
Answer
Answer: (d) Rice
7. How many varieties of rice are grown in different agro-climatic regions of India?
(a) 500
(b) 1,000
(c) 2,000
(d) 3,000
Answer
Answer: (d) 3,000
8. In which states do climatic conditions allow the cultivation of three crops of rice in an agricultural year?
(a) Punjab and Haryana
(b) Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh
(c) West Bengal and southern states
(d) Himalayas and northwestern parts of the country
Answer
Answer: (c) West Bengal and southern states
9. What percentage of rice production in the world does India contribute?
(a) 10.5%
(b) 15.2%
(c) 18.6%
(d) 22.07%
Answer
Answer: (d) 22.07%
10. Which states are the leading rice-producing states in India?
(a) Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, and Odisha
(b) West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh, and Punjab
(c) Tamil Nadu, Haryana, and Andhra Pradesh
(d) Karnataka, Maharashtra, and Gujarat
Answer
Answer: (b) West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh, and Punjab
11. In which regions of India is rice cultivation introduced as a kharif crop during the southwest Monsoon season?
(a) Western U.P. and northern Rajasthan
(b) Southern states and West Bengal
(c) Himalayas and northwestern parts of the country
(d) Eastern India to dry but irrigated areas of Punjab
Answer
Answer: (c) Himalayas and northwestern parts of the country
12. What is responsible
for the higher yield of rice in the irrigated areas of Punjab and Haryana?
(a) Traditional farming methods
(b) Dry climatic conditions
(c) Genetically improved varieties of seed
(d) Limited usage of fertilizers and pesticides
Answer
Answer: (c) Genetically improved varieties of seed
13. Which areas have low yield of rice due to rainfed conditions?
(a) Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Haryana, Andhra Pradesh
(b) Western U.P. and northern Rajasthan
(c) Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, and Odisha
(d) Himalayas and northwestern parts of the country
Answer
Answer: (c) Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, and Odisha
14. What major agricultural revolution led to the introduction of rice cultivation in Punjab and Haryana?
(a) White Revolution
(b) Blue Revolution
(c) Green Revolution
(d) Yellow Revolution
Answer
Answer: (c) Green Revolution
15. In which states is rice cultivation not a traditional practice?
(a) Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh
(b) Punjab and Haryana
(c) West Bengal and Uttar Pradesh
(d) Madhya Pradesh and Odisha
Answer
Answer: (b) Punjab and Haryana
1. What is the percentage of total wheat production in India compared to the world?
(a) 8.2%
(b) 12.8%
(c) 18.5%
(d) 25.3%
Answer
Answer: (b) 12.8%
2. In which season is wheat primarily cultivated in India?
(a) Kharif
(b) Rabi
(c) Zaid
(d) Summer
Answer
Answer: (b) Rabi
3. In which regions of India is wheat mostly grown under rainfed conditions?
(a) Indo-Gangetic Plain
(b) Himalayan highlands
(c) Malwa Plateau
(d) Western U.P.
Answer
Answer: (b) Himalayan highlands
4. What percentage of the total cropped area in India is under wheat cultivation?
(a) 8%
(b) 14%
(c) 20%
(d) 25%
Answer
Answer: (b) 14%
5. Which states are the leading wheat-producing states in India?
(a) Maharashtra, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh
(b) Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab
(c) Karnataka, Telangana, Bihar
(d) Rajasthan, Haryana, Tamil Nadu
Answer
Answer: (b) Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab
6. In which states does jowar account for more than half of the total production in India?
(a) Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh
(b) Maharashtra, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh
(c) Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Telangana
(d) Rajasthan, Haryana, Gujarat
Answer
Answer: (b) Maharashtra, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh
7. Where is bajra mostly cultivated in India?
(a) Indo-Gangetic Plain
(b) Himalayan highlands
(c) Northwestern and western parts
(d) Deccan and central plateaus
Answer
Answer: (c) Northwestern and western parts
8. Which states are the leading producers of bajra in India?
(a) Maharashtra, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh
(b) Karnataka, Telangana, Bihar
(c) Rajasthan, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh
(d) Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala
Answer
Answer: (c) Rajasthan, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh
9. In which climatic conditions is maize primarily grown?
(a) Tropical
(b) Arctic
(c) Semi-arid
(d) Mediterranean
Answer
Answer: (c) Semi-arid
10. In which regions of India is maize cultivation not concentrated?
(a) Punjab and eastern regions
(b) Southern states and Deccan plateau
(c) Northern India
(d) Western U.P. and northern Rajasthan
Answer
Answer: (a) Punjab and eastern regions
11. What percentage of the total cropped area do pulses occupy in India?
(a) 8%
(b) 11%
(c) 15%
(d) 20%
Answer
Answer: (b) 11%
12. Which regions of India are the main cultivation areas for pulses?
(a) Indo
-Gangetic Plain and Himalayas
(b) Southern states and Deccan plateau
(c) Western U.P. and northern Rajasthan
(d) Northwestern parts and central plateaus
Answer
Answer: (b) Southern states and Deccan plateau
13. What role do pulses play in increasing the natural fertility of soils?
(a) They reduce soil fertility
(b) They have no impact on soil fertility
(c) They increase soil fertility through nitrogen fixation
(d) They decrease soil fertility through nitrogen depletion
Answer
Answer: (c) They increase soil fertility through nitrogen fixation
14. What percentage of the total cropped area do coarse cereals occupy in India?
(a) 8%
(b) 12.5%
(c) 16.50%
(d) 20%
Answer
Answer: (c) 16.50%
15. Which state alone produces more than half of the total jowar production in India?
(a) Karnataka
(b) Maharashtra
(c) Madhya Pradesh
(d) Andhra Pradesh
Answer
Answer: (b) Maharashtra
16. Where is maize not grown in India?
(a) Punjab
(b) Karnataka
(c) Bihar
(d) Andhra Pradesh
Answer
Answer: (a) Punjab
17. In which regions of India is maize cultivation sown in both kharif and rabi seasons?
(a) Northern India
(b) Southern states
(c) Western U.P. and northern Rajasthan
(d) Southern states
Answer
Answer: (b) Southern states
18. In which states has the yield level of bajra increased during recent years?
(a) Maharashtra, Gujarat
(b) Rajasthan, Haryana
(c) Bihar, Andhra Pradesh
(d) Tamil Nadu, Karnataka
Answer
Answer: (b) Rajasthan, Haryana
19. Which states have high yields of wheat in India?
(a) Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Bihar
(b) Punjab, Haryana
(c) Maharashtra, Gujarat
(d) Karnataka, Telangana
Answer
Answer: (b) Punjab, Haryana
20. What percentage of the total cropped area in India is under pulses cultivation?
(a) 8%
(b) 11%
(c) 15%
(d) 20%
Answer
Answer: (b) 11%
1. In which season is Gram mostly cultivated in central, western, and northwestern parts of India?
(a) Kharif
(b) Rabi
(c) Zaid
(d) Summer
Answer
Answer: (b) Rabi
2. Which crop has displaced Gram from the cropping pattern in Haryana, Punjab, and northern Rajasthan following the green revolution?
(a) Rice
(b) Jowar
(c) Wheat
(d) Bajra
Answer
Answer: (c) Wheat
3. What percentage of the total cropped area in India is currently covered by Gram?
(a) 1.5%
(b) 2.8%
(c) 5%
(d) 7%
Answer
Answer: (b) 2.8%
4. Which states are the main producers of Gram in India?
(a) Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra
(b) Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra
(c) Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Rajasthan
(d) Haryana, Punjab, Karnataka
Answer
Answer: (b) Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra
5. What is the primary name of Tur, which is the second important pulse crop in India?
(a) Chana
(b) Masoor
(c) Arhar
(d) Moong
Answer
Answer: (c) Arhar
6. In which regions of India is Tur cultivated under rainfed conditions?
(a) Northern India
(b) Southern states
(c) Eastern India
(d) Central and southern states
Answer
Answer: (d) Central and southern states
7. What percentage of the total cropped area in India is covered by Tur?
(a) 1%
(b) 2%
(c) 2.5%
(d) 5%
Answer
Answer: (c) 2.5%
8. Which state contributes about one-third of the total production of Tur in India?
(a) Karnataka
(b) Gujarat
(c) Maharashtra
(d) Madhya Pradesh
Answer
Answer: (c) Maharashtra
9. What percentage of the total cropped area in India is occupied by oilseeds?
(a) 8%
(b) 11%
(c) 14%
(d) 18%
Answer
Answer: (c) 14%
10. Which regions of India are known for oilseeds cultivation?
(a) Gangetic Plain and Himalayas
(b) Deccan and central plateaus
(c) Western U.P. and northern Rajasthan
(d) Eastern India and Assam
Answer
Answer: (b) Deccan and central plateaus
11. Which crop accounts for about 18.8% of the total groundnut production in the world (2018)?
(a) Soyabean
(b) Sunflower
(c) Groundnut
(d) Rapeseed
Answer
Answer: (c) Groundnut
12. In which season is groundnut mostly cultivated in southern India?
(a) Kharif
(b) Rabi
(c) Z
aid
(d) Summer
Answer
Answer: (b) Rabi
13. Which state has a comparatively high yield of groundnut?
(a) Telangana
(b) Gujarat
(c) Rajasthan
(d) Tamil Nadu
Answer
Answer: (d) Tamil Nadu
14. What is the primary name for Rapeseed and Mustard collectively?
(a) Rai
(b) Sarson
(c) Toria
(d) Taramira
Answer
Answer: (a) Rai
15. In which regions of India are Rapeseed and Mustard cultivated during the rabi season?
(a) Northern India
(b) Southern states
(c) Western U.P. and northern Rajasthan
(d) Central and north-western parts
Answer
Answer: (d) Central and north-western parts
16. What percentage of the total cropped area in India is occupied by Rapeseed and Mustard?
(a) 1%
(b) 2%
(c) 2.5%
(d) 5%
Answer
Answer: (a) 1%
17. Which state contributes about one-third of the total production of Rapeseed and Mustard in India?
(a) Haryana
(b) Rajasthan
(c) Madhya Pradesh
(d) Gujarat
Answer
Answer: (b) Rajasthan
18. Which two oilseeds are mentioned as “other important oilseeds” in the given content?
(a) Groundnut and Soyabean
(b) Sunflower and Rapeseed
(c) Rapeseed and Mustard
(d) Soyabean and Sunflower
Answer
Answer: (d) Soyabean and Sunflower
19. In which states is Soyabean mostly grown in India?
(a) Punjab and Haryana
(b) Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra
(c) Karnataka and Tamil Nadu
(d) Uttar Pradesh and Bihar
Answer
Answer: (b) Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra
20. Which term is used for the cultivation season of Soyabean in India?
(a) Kharif
(b) Rabi
(c) Zaid
(d) Summer
Answer
Answer: (a) Kharif
1. Which two states together produce about 90% of the total output of soyabean in India?
(a) Maharashtra and Gujarat
(b) Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh
(c) Telangana and Karnataka
(d) Haryana and Punjab
Answer
Answer: (a) Maharashtra and Gujarat
2. In which states is sunflower cultivation concentrated in India?
(a) Punjab, Haryana, and Rajasthan
(b) Maharashtra, Telangana, Karnataka, and Andhra Pradesh
(c) Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, and Jharkhand
(d) Assam, West Bengal, and Odisha
Answer
Answer: (b) Maharashtra, Telangana, Karnataka, and Andhra Pradesh
3. What type of crops provide fiber for preparing cloth, bags, sacks, and other items?
(a) Cereals
(b) Pulses
(c) Fiber Crops
(d) Oilseeds
Answer
Answer: (c) Fiber Crops
4. Which tropical crop is grown in the kharif season in semi-arid areas of the country and ranks second in the world in production?
(a) Jute
(b) Cotton
(c) Soyabean
(d) Sunflower
Answer
Answer: (b) Cotton
5. India lost a large proportion of cotton growing area to which country during partition?
(a) China
(b) Pakistan
(c) Bangladesh
(d) Afghanistan
Answer
Answer: (b) Pakistan
6. Which region of India lost large jute growing areas to East Pakistan (Bangladesh) during partition?
(a) Western Ghats
(b) Gangetic Plain
(c) Himalayan Foothills
(d) Eastern India
Answer
Answer: (d) Eastern India
7. What is the percentage of total cropped area in the country covered by cotton?
(a) 2.5%
(b) 4.7%
(c) 7%
(d) 10%
Answer
Answer: (b) 4.7%
8. Which are the three cotton-growing areas mentioned in the content?
(a) Gujarat, Maharashtra, and Telangana
(b) Punjab, Haryana, and Rajasthan
(c) Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu
(d) Punjab, Gujarat, and Andhra Pradesh
Answer
Answer: (a) Gujarat, Maharashtra, and Telangana
9. Which state accounts for about three-fourths of the jute production in India?
(a) Assam
(b) Bihar
(c) West Bengal
(d) Odisha
Answer
Answer: (c) West Bengal
10. Which tropical crop is largely an irrigated crop in India and is concentrated in Uttar Pradesh?
(a) Cotton
(b) Jute
(c) Soyabean
(d) Sugarcane
Answer
Answer: (d) Sugarcane
11. In which region is sugarcane cultivation largely concentrated in India?
(a) Indo-Gangetic Plain
(b) Western Ghats
(c) Deccan Plateau
(d) Eastern Himalayas
Answer
Answer: (a) Indo-Gangetic Plain
12.
What percentage of the total groundnut production in the world does India produce?
(a) 10%
(b) 15%
(c) 18.8%
(d) 25%
Answer
Answer: (c) 18.8%
13. Which crop is used for making coarse cloth, bags, sacks, and decorative items?
(a) Cotton
(b) Jute
(c) Soyabean
(d) Sunflower
Answer
Answer: (b) Jute
14. How much of the total jute production of the world does India contribute?
(a) One-fourth
(b) One-third
(c) Three-fifth
(d) Half
Answer
Answer: (c) Three-fifth
15. Which state accounts for about three-fifths of the jute production in India?
(a) Assam
(b) Bihar
(c) West Bengal
(d) Odisha
Answer
Answer: (c) West Bengal
1. Which state in southern India cultivates sugarcane in irrigated tracts?
(a) Maharashtra
(b) Tamil Nadu
(c) Karnataka
(d) Telangana
Answer
Answer: (c) Karnataka
2. In 2018, which country ranked second in sugarcane production after Brazil?
(a) China
(b) India
(c) USA
(d) Australia
Answer
Answer: (b) India
3. What percentage of the world’s sugarcane production does India contribute?
(a) 10%
(b) 15%
(c) 19.7%
(d) 25%
Answer
Answer: (c) 19.7%
4. Which state in India produces about two-fifths of the country’s sugarcane?
(a) Maharashtra
(b) Uttar Pradesh
(c) Tamil Nadu
(d) Andhra Pradesh
Answer
Answer: (b) Uttar Pradesh
5. In which regions of India is the yield level of sugarcane high?
(a) Northern India
(b) Southern India
(c) Eastern India
(d) Western India
Answer
Answer: (d) Western India
6. What type of crop is tea primarily used for?
(a) Medicinal
(b) Beverage
(c) Textile
(d) Construction
Answer
Answer: (b) Beverage
7. Which type of tea leaves are fermented?
(a) Green tea
(b) Black tea
(c) Oolong tea
(d) White tea
Answer
Answer: (b) Black tea
8. In which region of India did tea plantation start in the 1840s?
(a) Western Ghats
(b) Himalayas
(c) Deccan Plateau
(d) Brahmaputra valley of Assam
Answer
Answer: (d) Brahmaputra valley of Assam
9. What is India’s share in the world’s tea production as of 2018?
(a) 10%
(b) 15%
(c) 21.22%
(d) 30%
Answer
Answer: (c) 21.22%
10. Which country ranks first among tea-exporting countries in the world?
(a) India
(b) China
(c) USA
(d) Brazil
Answer
Answer: (b) China
11. Which state accounts for about 53.2% of the total cropped area and more than half of the total production of tea in India?
(a) West Bengal
(b) Tamil Nadu
(c) Assam
(d) Karnataka
Answer
Answer: (c) Assam
12. What variety of coffee is mostly grown in India?
(a) Liberica
(b) Arabica
(c) Robusta
(d) Espresso
Answer
Answer: (b) Arabica
13. What percentage of the world’s coffee production does India contribute?
(a) 1.5%
(b) 3.17%
(c) 5%
(d) 8%
Answer
Answer: (b) 3.17%
14. Which state accounts for more than two-thirds of the total coffee production in India?
(a) Tamil Nadu
(b) Kerala
(c) Karnataka
(d) Andhra Pradesh
Answer
Answer: (c) Karnataka
15. In which geographical feature is coffee primarily cultivated in India?
(a) Plains
(b) Plateaus
(c) Deserts
(d) Highlands of Western Ghats
Answer
Answer: (d) Highlands of Western Ghats
1. What was the nature of Indian agricultural economy before Independence?
(a) Commercial
(b) Industrial
(c) Subsistence
(d) Export-oriented
Answer
Answer: (c) Subsistence
2. What was the immediate goal of the Government of India after Independence in the agricultural sector?
(a) Increase cash crop production
(b) Switch from food crops to cash crops
(c) Increase foodgrains production
(d) Reduce cultivated land
Answer
Answer: (c) Increase foodgrains production
3. What strategy was adopted to increase foodgrains production immediately after Independence?
(a) Importing foodgrains
(b) Intensification of cropping
(c) Switching to cash crops
(d) Decreasing cultivated area
Answer
Answer: (b) Intensification of cropping
4. What programmes were launched to overcome agricultural production stagnation during the late 1950s?
(a) Green Revolution
(b) Intensive Agricultural District Programme (IADP)
(c) Swachh Bharat Abhiyan
(d) Both (b) and (c)
Answer
Answer: (d) Both (b) and (c)
5. What challenge did India face during the mid-1960s regarding food?
(a) Food surplus
(b) Food crisis
(c) Exporting foodgrains
(d) Abundance of rainfed land
Answer
Answer: (b) Food crisis
1. What were the new seed varieties of wheat and rice known as in the mid-1960s?
(a) Advanced Seeds
(b) Green Seeds
(c) High Yielding Varieties (HYVs)
(d) Hybrid Seeds
Answer
Answer: (c) High Yielding Varieties (HYVs)
2. Which countries were the sources of the new seed varieties of wheat and rice?
(a) India and China
(b) Mexico and Philippines
(c) USA and Japan
(d) Australia and Vietnam
Answer
Answer: (b) Mexico and Philippines
3. Which regions of India initially benefitted from the Green Revolution?
(a) Southern and Eastern regions
(b) Western and Northern regions
(c) Eastern and Central regions
(d) Irrigated areas of Punjab, Haryana, and Western Uttar Pradesh
Answer
Answer: (d) Irrigated areas of Punjab, Haryana, and Western Uttar Pradesh
4. What was a basic pre-requisite for the success of the new agricultural technology introduced during the Green Revolution?
(a) Export-oriented policies
(b) Introduction of cash crops
(c) Assured supply of soil moisture through irrigation
(d) Reduction of cultivated land
Answer
Answer: (c) Assured supply of soil moisture through irrigation
5. What term is used to describe the spurt of agricultural growth resulting from the new agricultural technology?
(a) Blue Revolution
(b) Yellow Revolution
(c) White Revolution
(d) Green Revolution
Answer
Answer: (d) Green Revolution
6. What did the Green Revolution lead to initially?
(a) Agricultural stagnation
(b) Regional disparities
(c) Export-oriented agriculture
(d) Self-reliance in foodgrain production
Answer
Answer: (d) Self-reliance in foodgrain production
7. What did the Planning Commission of India focus on in the 1980s to induce regionally balanced agricultural development?
(a) Import-oriented planning
(b) Agro-climatic planning
(c) Industrial development
(d) Urbanization
Answer
Answer: (b) Agro-climatic planning
1. What is the primary objective of the National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture (NMSA)?
(a) To promote urbanization
(b) To make agriculture more productive, sustainable, and climate-resilient
(c) To develop industrial zones
(d) To increase population density in rural areas
Answer
Answer: (b) To make agriculture more productive, sustainable, and climate-resilient
2. How does the National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture promote farming systems?
(a) By encouraging monoculture
(b) By promoting location-specific integrated/composite farming systems
(c) By discouraging soil conservation measures
(d) By focusing only on cash crops
Answer
Answer: (b) By promoting location-specific integrated/composite farming systems
3. Which schemes promote organic farming in the country?
(a) Jal Yojana
(b) Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana (PKVY)
(c) Rashtriya Vikas Yojana (RKVY)
(d) Jal Nagari
Answer
Answer: (b) Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana (PKVY) and (c) Rashtriya Vikas Yojana (RKVY)
4. What is the focus of the National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture regarding natural resources?
(a) To deplete natural resources
(b) To conserve natural resources through appropriate soil and moisture conservation measures
(c) To encourage overuse of water resources
(d) To ignore natural resource conservation
Answer
Answer: (b) To conserve natural resources through appropriate soil and moisture conservation measures
5. What is the overall aim of the National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture?
(a) To decrease agricultural productivity
(b) To make agriculture less remunerative
(c) To promote climate vulnerability
(d) To make agriculture more productive, sustainable, remunerative, and climate-resilient
Answer
Answer: (d) To make agriculture more productive, sustainable, remunerative, and climate-resilient
1. What has significantly increased in agricultural output during the last 50 years?
(a) Decrease in production
(b) Stagnation in yield
(c) Impressive rate of increase
(d) Reduction in technology
Answer
Answer: (c) Impressive rate of increase
2. Which crops have shown a significant increase in production?
(a) Crops such as rice and wheat
(b) Only rice
(c) Only wheat
(d) None of the above
Answer
Answer: (a) Crops such as rice and wheat
3. What has played a crucial role in enhancing agricultural output?
(a) Decrease in irrigation
(b) Stagnation in technology
(c) Expansion of irrigation
(d) Reduction in crop varieties
Answer
Answer: (c) Expansion of irrigation
4. What provided the basis for the introduction of modern agricultural technology?
(a) Decrease in agricultural output
(b) Expansion of irrigation
(c) Stagnation in technology
(d) Modern agricultural technology itself
Answer
Answer: (b) Expansion of irrigation
5. What has increased by 15 times since the mid-sixties?
(a) Use of pesticides
(b) Consumption of chemical fertilizers
(c) Production of high yielding varieties
(d) Expansion of modern technology
Answer
Answer: (b) Consumption of chemical fertilizers
6. Why has the use of pesticides increased significantly since the 1960s?
(a) Decrease in pest susceptibility
(b) Decrease in crop diseases
(c) High susceptibility of high yielding varieties to pests and diseases
(d) Reduction in the use of modern technology
Answer
Answer: (c) High susceptibility of high yielding varieties to pests and diseases
7. What has diffused very fast in various areas of the country?
(a) Stagnation in technology
(b) Decrease in agricultural output
(c) Modern agricultural technology
(d) Expansion of traditional farming practices
Answer
Answer: (c) Modern agricultural technology
1. What is the Farmer’s Portal primarily designed for?
(a) Entertainment purposes
(b) Seeking information related to agriculture
(c) Social networking
(d) Online shopping
Answer
Answer: (b) Seeking information related to agriculture
2. What types of information are provided on the Farmer’s Portal?
(a) Only information on crops
(b) Only information on insurance
(c) Detailed information on various aspects of agriculture
(d) Entertainment-related information
Answer
Answer: (c) Detailed information on various aspects of agriculture
3. What interactive map details are available on the Farmer’s Portal?
(a) Map details related to travel
(b) Map details related to market prices
(c) Map details related to entertainment
(d) Block level details related to soil fertility, storage, insurance, training, etc.
Answer
Answer: (d) Block level details related to soil fertility, storage, insurance, training, etc.
1. What is the percentage of cultivated land in India covered by irrigation?
(a) 10%
(b) 33%
(c) 50%
(d) 75%
Answer
Answer: (b) 33%
2. What is the primary factor determining crop production on the majority of cultivated land in India?
(a) Soil fertility
(b) Irrigation
(c) Pesticides
(d) Mechanization
Answer
Answer: (b) Irrigation
3. What percentage of cultivated land in India is dependent on rain for crop production?
(a) 10%
(b) 33%
(c) 50%
(d) 75%
Answer
Answer: (d) 75%
4. Which areas in India are highly vulnerable to both droughts and floods?
(a) Punjab and Haryana
(b) Coastal regions
(c) Rajasthan and other drought-prone areas
(d) Himalayan foothills
Answer
Answer: (c) Rajasthan and other drought-prone areas
5. What is a common phenomenon in low rainfall areas that may also experience occasional floods?
(a) Earthquakes
(b) Tornadoes
(c) Droughts
(d) Hailstorms
Answer
Answer: (c) Droughts
6. What is a significant problem in Indian agriculture in comparison to international levels?
(a) High productivity
(b) Low productivity
(c) Moderate productivity
(d) Fluctuating productivity
Answer
Answer: (b) Low productivity
7. Which of the following countries has higher per hectare output for crops like rice, wheat, cotton, and oilseeds in comparison to India?
(a) U.S.A.
(b) Russia
(c) Japan
(d) All of the above
Answer
Answer: (d) All of the above
8. What type of areas in India mostly grow coarse cereals, pulses, and oilseeds with low yields?
(a) Irrigated areas
(b) Rainfed areas, especially drylands
(c) Coastal areas
(d) Hilly areas
Answer
Answer: (b) Rainfed areas, especially drylands
1. Why do marginal and small farmers find the resource-intensive approach in modern agriculture unmanageable?
(a) Lack of knowledge
(b) Lack of interest
(c) Expensive inputs
(d) Lack of water
Answer
Answer: (c) Expensive inputs
2. What do marginal and small farmers resort to in order to overcome the difficulties of expensive inputs in agriculture?
(a) Reduce crop production
(b) Avail credit
(c) Invest in other businesses
(d) Abandon agriculture
Answer
Answer: (b) Avail credit
3. What has forced many marginal and small farmers to fall into the trap of indebtedness?
(a) High returns from agriculture
(b) Low returns from agriculture
(c) Adequate savings
(d) Government support
Answer
Answer: (b) Low returns from agriculture
1. What was the most exploitative revenue system for Indian peasants during the British period?
(a) Mahalwari
(b) Ryotwari
(c) Zamindari
(d) Feudalwari
Answer
Answer: (c) Zamindari
2. Why were land reforms not effectively implemented after Independence?
(a) Lack of awareness
(b) Lack of financial resources
(c) Lack of political will
(d) Lack of suitable land
Answer
Answer: (c) Lack of political will
3. What is detrimental to agricultural development due to the lack of implementation of land reforms?
(a) Exploitation of peasants
(b) Equitable distribution of land
(c) Unequitable distribution of cultivable land
(d) Increase in agricultural productivity
Answer
Answer: (c) Unequitable distribution of cultivable land
4. What is the average size of landholding doing under increasing population pressure?
(a) Increasing
(b) Stable
(c) Shrinking
(d) Expanding
Answer
Answer: (c) Shrinking
5. What is the major reason for the uneconomic nature of small size fragmented landholdings?
(a) Lack of water
(b) High input costs
(c) Population pressure
(d) Lack of consolidation
Answer
Answer: (d) Lack of consolidation
1. What is a major reason for a lack of commercialization in Indian agriculture?
(a) Lack of water resources
(b) Large landholdings
(c) Farmers producing for self-consumption
(d) Government regulations
Answer
Answer: (c) Farmers producing for self-consumption
2. In which areas has modernization and commercialization of agriculture taken place?
(a) Unirrigated tracts
(b) Rainfed areas
(c) Hilly regions
(d) Irrigated areas
Answer
Answer: (d) Irrigated areas
3. What is the seasonal unemployment range in unirrigated tracts?
(a) 1 to 3 months
(b) 4 to 8 months
(c) 9 to 12 months
(d) No unemployment
Answer
Answer: (b) 4 to 8 months
4. What is the primary reason for underemployment in the agricultural sector?
(a) Lack of education
(b) Technological advancements
(c) Seasonal nature of agricultural operations
(d) Low wages
Answer
Answer: (c) Seasonal nature of agricultural operations
5. What do most small and marginal farmers grow, considering their land resources?
(a) Commercial crops
(b) Fruits and vegetables
(c) Cash crops
(d) Foodgrains for self-consumption
Answer
Answer: (d) Foodgrains for self-consumption
1. What is a serious consequence of the faulty strategy of irrigation and agricultural development?
(a) Increased crop yields
(b) Degradation of cultivable land
(c) Enhanced soil fertility
(d) Improved water management
Answer
Answer: (b) Degradation of cultivable land
2. In which areas is the situation of land degradation particularly alarming?
(a) Hilly regions
(b) Rainfed areas
(c) Arid zones
(d) Irrigated areas
Answer
Answer: (d) Irrigated areas
3. What is a consequence of the excessive use of chemicals such as insecticides and pesticides?
(a) Increased soil fertility
(b) Alkalisation of soils
(c) Natural fertilization
(d) Nitrogen fixation
Answer
Answer: (b) Alkalisation of soils
4. What has led to the displacement of leguminous crops in irrigated areas?
(a) Increased soil fertility
(b) Waterlogging
(c) Nitrogen fixation
(d) Excessive use of chemicals
Answer
Answer: (d) Excessive use of chemicals
5. What has substantially reduced in irrigated areas owing to multiple cropping?
(a) Soil erosion
(b) Alkalisation of soils
(c) Duration of fallow
(d) Waterlogging
Answer
Answer: (c) Duration of fallow
6. What has been obliterated by the process of multiple cropping in irrigated areas?
(a) Nitrogen fixation
(b) Soil erosion
(c) Alkalisation of soils
(d) Waterlogging
Answer
Answer: (a) Nitrogen fixation
7. What types of degradation are experienced in rainfed areas in humid and semi-arid tropics?
(a) Alkalisation of soils
(b) Waterlogging
(c) Wind erosion
(d) Nitrogen fixation
Answer
Answer: (c) Wind erosion
8. What is often induced by human activities in rainfed areas?
(a) Waterlogging
(b) Alkalisation of soils
(c) Nitrogen fixation
(d) Wind erosion
Answer
Answer: (d) Wind erosion